Ricoh Caplio R5 Digital Camera Review (70%)

Ricoh Caplio R5 Digital Camera Review (70%)Fresh out of Japan is the new Caplio R5 digital camera, featuring anti-shake, a new 7.24 megapixel CCD and the same mighty 7.1x optical wide zoom lens (28-200mm, 35mm equiv) as seen on its predecessor, the Caplio R4 ( reviewed here in April 2006).

Ricoh are making big claims for the low light capabilities of their new image processing engine, which works with the built in CCD-shift vibration correction method to produce what they describe as, “high quality images at even higher ISO settings with low noise.”

The new model looks very similar to the R4, but there’s been a few changes in the physical layout: the anti-shake on/off button from the top plate has now disappeared into a sub-menu accessible from the LCD interface, with a circular on/off button taking its place.

Ricoh Caplio R5 Digital Camera Review (70%)We can’t say we liked this move, as the smaller, recessed power button is much harder to operate (we also had issues with powering up the camera, but we’ll move on to that later).

Sneaking around the back
The buttons on the rear of the camera have been shunted around a bit too, with the zoom rocker also getting that shrinking feeling while being moved closer to the LCD screen.

We really can’t work out the thinking behind this move. The new, smaller zoom control is much harder to operate and if you were wearing gloves, zooming would be nigh-on impossible.

The small three-way camera/screen/movie switch also remains as fiddly as with the R4, although Ricoh’s designers have seen fit to move it to the right hand side of the camera.

Ricoh Caplio R5 Digital Camera Review (70%)LCD screen
There’s still a healthily large 2.5-inch LCD dominating the back of the camera.

This has been ramped up from 150k to 230k pixels although the difference didn’t seem as stunning as we might have hoped.

A quick caveat here: we ended up going into a camera store and asking them to get out a R4 for comparison.

While holding out both cameras pointing at the same scene we have to say there didn’t seem a huge amount of difference – sure, the R5 seemed a bit smoother, but none of the waiting customers managed to guess which screen was the newer one.

Ricoh Caplio R5 Digital Camera Review (70%)Seeing as the assistant was most unimpressed with our antics we had to cut short our testing, so we can only assume that the differences would manifest themselves under more demanding light conditions or under closer scrutiny.

With all those extra pixels, the screen has to be better so maybe we were all on drugs or something.

Daytime shooting
Like Dracula in reverse, this camera works best when the sun is in the sky.

Taking the R5 out for a stroll around London, we were pleased by its fast power-up times and were constantly reminded of the benefits of having a compact with a proper wide-angle zoom range.

Ricoh Caplio R5 Digital Camera Review (70%)The LCD screen was easy to read (although, being London in September, the sun wasn’t exactly blinding), but we would have liked to have seen an optical viewfinder in there too.

Although suffering from a rather noisy zooming mechanism, the R5 took crisp and pleasing daytime shots, with exposure generally spot on and images exposed at 64 and 100 ISO showing very little noise.

The banding issues that plagued the R4 were also noticeable by their absence too.

The new 640 x 480/30fps movie mode was fun, and produced some smooth clips, although the juddery digital zoom is best left alone (like most digicams, the optical zoom is deactivated when shooting in movie mode).

Ricoh Caplio R5 Digital Camera Review (70%)Night time woes
We were disappointed with the camera’s night time performance.

Purely in the interests of ensuring a full test, we took the camera out to a Brixton club and grabbed the kind of pics that your average punter might take on a night out.

These included a few snaps of the band, pictures of friends looking a little worse for wear, the inevitable drunk ‘group shot’ and some grabbed shots from around the club.

Throughout the night, the Ricoh would sometimes struggle to get a fix in low light conditions, and on a few occasions the entire thing froze up or wouldn’t turn on. Taking the battery out and putting it back in seemed to fix the problem, at the expense of a few missed shots.

Even when the camera was working perfectly, some shots were ruined because of Ricoh’s crazy placement of the flash gun -for many right-handers, their middle finger will naturally fall right in front of the flash. End result: under-exposed shots.

Ricoh Caplio R5 Digital Camera Review (70%)Noisy nights
Noise at 400ISO actually seemed worse than with the R4 and when we remembered to move our fingers out of the way of the flash, the results weren’t too flattering.

The none-too-impressive f3.3 maximum aperture meant that the camera was always reaching up to the higher ISO settings, and the higher the sensitivity, the grainier things got.

Although it was handy to have full resolution ISO 1600 sensitivity, the results fell woefully short of the quality of similarly-priced rivals like the Fujifilm FinePix F30 (although that camera has a greatly reduced zoom range).

Running the photos through noise reduction software like Noise Ninja vastly improved things – perhaps enough to just get away with a 10″ x 8″ print – but we really can’t recommend the R5 for night hawks.

Ricoh Caplio R5 Digital Camera Review (70%)Street photographers looking to grab late night sneaky shots with the camera on 10 second self timer will have to think again too as the flash – yes the FLASH! – blinks brightly on and off during the countdown!

It’s like saying, “Yoo-hoo! Muggers! Over here! Look at me!” and despite scouring the manual we couldn’t find a way of turning it off.

It’s one of the daftest things we’ve seen on a modern camera.

Manual focus
One thing we really like about the Ricoh R5 (and the Ricoh GR) is its manual focus abilities -a rare treat on a mid price camera.

The ‘snap’ mode – in particular – is fabulous for grabbing quick shots but annoyingly Ricoh still haven’t fixed the problem that results in the flash completely overexposing subjects close to the camera.

Sort it out Ricoh – it does the same thing on our upmarket Ricoh GR and we expect better for the money.

Download example files (Three images, ZIP format, 7.5MB)

Interface
We’ve always liked Ricoh’s clear, no-nonsense interface and had no complaints with what we found on the R5, although saving files to the camera’s internal memory was very slow.

Switching to a Fujifilm 2GB SD card sped things up considerably.

Ricoh Caplio R5 Digital Camera Review (70%) We had some problems with that the SD slot, with a worrying ‘card format’ error popping up unexpectedly halfway through a shoot.

We would have been most unchuffed to have lost all the photos we’d taken, but turning the camera off a few times seemed to solve the problem. Had we bought the camera, this would have been enough to have sent us hot footing it back to the camera store demanding a refund.

As with the R4, the camera is firmly pointed at the point and shoot camera brigade with very little in the way of advanced options for photographers who like to fiddle about with exposure settings.

Despite its mass market aspirations, the camera still doesn’t have too many consumer-friendly scene modes compared to their rivals – a serious omission in our book.

Conclusion
On the face of it, the Caplio R5 offers a lot for the casual snapper, serving up a generous 7 megapixel sensor, built-in anti shake and an impressively wide angle zoom in a suitably bijou package.

The price is right too, set at a highly affordable £250 ($443, €361), placing it smack bang in the middle of a highly competitive price sector.

With its impressive 28mm-200mm lens, there’s a lot to like about the R5, and anyone prepared to work with the camera could eek out some high quality shots, although consumers looking for an easy-peasy, point’n’shooter might be frustrated with the camera’s poor low light performance.

After encountering so many problems during the review, we’re finding it hard to recommend the R5 outright, although our previous positive experiences with Ricoh products make us inclined to put the glitches down to early production teething problems. Let’s hope we’re right.

We still can’t see enough here to encourage R4 owners that it’s worth the upgrade, but the combination of the mighty lens, great daytime pictures and the small form factor may prove an irresistible attraction to some consumers.

We just hope they buy their new R5 from a company with a good returns policy, just in case.

Rating
Ease of use: 80%
Picture quality: 65%
Features: 80%
Value for money: 75%
Overall: 70%

Ricoh Caplio R5 specifications
Sensor 1/2.5″ Type CCD
7.24 million effective pixels
Image sizes
3072 x 2304
3072 x 2048
2592 x 1944
2048 x 1536
1280 x 960
640 x 480
Movie clips
640 x 480 @ 15/30fps
320 x 240 @ 15/30fps
160 x 120 @ 15/30fps
WAV sound
File formats
JPEG Exif v2.2
DPOF
DCF compliant
AVI (Open DML Motion JPEG)
Lens
28-200mm (35mm equiv)
F3.3-4.8
7.1x zoom
Image stabilization
CCD-shift Vibration correction
Conversion lenses: No
Digital zoom up to 3.6x
Focus
Auto Focus
Manual Focus
Snap
Infinity
Focus distance
Normal: 0.3 m – infinity (Wide) 1.0 m – infinity (Tele)
Macro: 0.01 m – infinity (Wide), 0.14 m – infinity (Tele)
Metering
TTL-CCD Metering Method: Multi (256 segments)
Center weighted
Ricoh Caplio R5 Digital Camera Review (70%)Spot
ISO sensitivity
AUTO
ISO 64
ISO 100
ISO 200
ISO 400
ISO 800
ISO 1600
Exposure compensation
+/-2EV in 1/3EV steps
Exposure bracketing
-0.5EV, +/-0, +0.5EV
Shutter speed
8, 4, 2, 1 – 1/2000 sec
Aperture
F3.3-4.8
Modes
Still
Continuous
S-Continuous
M-Continuous
Scene modes
Portrait
Sports
Landscape
Nightscape
Skew correction
Text
Zoom Macro
High Sensitivity
My Setting 1 and 2
White balance
Auto
Fixed (Outdoors, Cloudy, Incandescent Lamp, Incandescent Lamp2, Fluorescent Lamp, Manual settings)
White balance fine tune
White Balance Bracket
Self timer
2 or 10 sec
Continuous shooting
2.8fps
Flash
Flash Off , Auto, Red-Eye Flash, Flash on, Flash Synch
Range: approx. 0.2 m-2.4 m (Wide) approx. 0.14 m-1.8 m (Tele)
LCD monitor
2.5-inch Transparent Amorphous Silicon TFT LCD
230,000 pixels
Connectivity
USB 2.0 High Speed
AV out
NTSC/PAL switchable
Storage 26MB internal memory
SD/MMC card compatible
Power
Rechargeable battery DB-60
AC adapter
Weight (no batt)
140 g
Dimensions 96 x 55 x 26 mm )

SanDisk Launches V-MATE Video Flash Memory Card Recorder:IFA

SanDisk Launches V-MATE Video Flash Memory Card Recorder:IFAAlthough there’s no shortage of gadgets like smartphones, PDAs, iPod and PSPs that are capable of playing back video, getting footage on to the fellas can be a bit of a pain.

“Today’s increasingly mobile consumer wants to be able to watch their favourite shows and videos, whenever and wherever they want,” insisted Wes Brewer, SanDisk’s vice president of consumer product marketing, and he reackons the new SanDisk V-Mate is a simple and practical solution to the problem.

Video hungry gadget freaks can simply hook up analogue audio or video outputs to the device, slap in the memory card from their multimedia handset and the Sandisk will record the content straight to the memory card.

SanDisk Launches V-MATE Video Flash Memory Card Recorder:IFAUsers can connect the V-Mate to the AV output of their video recorder, set-top box, Freeview, DVR, DVD player, TV or other device and use the V-Mate’s remote control to configure the device, plus record and access content via a TV-based interface.

The SanDisk offers multiple programming slots for entering channel, date and start/stop times to schedule recordings, with users being required to select their playback device to ensure the recordings are playback compatible.

The box also comes with an infrared emitter which can automatically turn on the TV tuner box (cable/satellite/terrestrial receiver or VCR) and select the right channel when programmed to record.

There’s also a mini-USB port on board for connecting the unit to a desktop/laptop PC.

Being designed for the wee small screen of portable multimedia devices, the SanDisk offers a maximum recording resolution of just 640 x 480 – perhaps not great for your 72″ HD plasma screen at home, but just dandy for yer average smartphone.

At this low resolution, punters should be able to grab around three and a half hours of video footage per gigabyte – ample time to keep you entertained on even the most delayed of commuter journeys.

“We are hoping to replace the VCR with this product,” a Sandisk spokesman enthused. “It will be like having a video recorder in your pocket.”

The 5.1″ x 2.6″ x 0.8″ V-Mate is compatible with a ton of memory card formats: SD, MMC, MMCplus MMCmobile, SDHC, MiniSDHC, MicroSDHC, Memory Stick PRO, Memory Stick Duo and Memory Stick PRO Duo, and the device is expected to go on sale in October for $130 or so.

Brando 52 in 1 USB Bluetooth Card Reader

Brando 52 in 1 USB Bluetooth Card ReaderIf – like us – you’ve been using digital cameras and electronics gizmos for years on end you might now be the proud owner of a huge pile of memory cards in a host of different formats, with a ton of cables scattered around the office.

With limited USB ports available on laptops, most of us have had to invest in a card reader, and although we were pretty impressed with the Targus 14 in 1 USB Card Reader we reviewed last year, compared to Brando’s brand new, read-anything-that-moves USB Bluetooth Card Reader, it’s positively Spartan.

Brando’s new reader manages to accommodate an astonishing 52 formats and, for your enlightenment and enchantment, here’s the full list:

CF I, CF II, Extreme CF, Extreme III CF, Ultra II CF, HS CF, XS-XS CF, CF Elite PRO, CF PRO, CF PRO II, IMB MD, Hitachi MD, MagicStor, MS, MS PRO, MS Duo, MS PRO Duo, MS MG, MS MG PRO, MS MG Duo, MS MG PRO Duo, Extreme MS PRO, Extreme III MS PRO, Ultra II MS PRO, HS MS MG PRO, HS MS MG PRO Duo, HS MS PRO, HS MS PRO Duo, MS ROM, MS Select, SD, *MiniSD, HS Mini SD, Extreme SD, Extreme III SD, Ultra II SD, SD-Ultra-X, Ultra speed SD, SD PRO, SD Elite PRO, HS SD, MMC, MMC 4.0, HS MMC, HS RS MMC, RS MMC, RS MMC 4.0, DV-RS MMC, SM, SM ROM, XD, *T-Flash.

Brando 52 in 1 USB Bluetooth Card ReaderThe USB 2.0 reader also conveniently doubles up as a Bluetooth hub, allowing you to wirelessly transfer data between Bluetooth devices such as mobile phones and PDAs.

Being a device from our favourite weird’n’wonderful gizmo makers Brando, there’s also some totally pointless eye candy on offer, with the device cycling through “multi moody colours” – perfect if you’d like to host a mini disco by the pencil sharpener on your desk.

Brando claim a receiving/sending range of 20m, with the supplied cable measuring in at 64cm.

Brando 52 in 1 USB Bluetooth Card ReaderCompatible with Windows 98/98SE/ME/2000/XP, the 63x63x15mm reader weighs in at 76g and is powered by the host computer’s USB slot.

It’s as cheap as chips too, priced at just US$25.

We only wish that electronics manufacturers would stop inventing bloomin’ new formats every other day and made these multi-readers obselete….

Brando

Pentax Optio A20 Offers Three Types Of Anti-Shake

Pentax Optio A20 Offers Three Types Of Anti-ShakeDespite increased pixel counts rapidly reaching the wall of diminishing returns for consumers, Pentax have joined the trend for beefing up the megapixel ratings with their new Optio A20 compact digital camera.

Stuffing in a ten megapixel sensor, the A20 is an attractively understated lightweight compact which offers three types of anti-shake, a 2.5inch LCD screen and enough power from its two AA batteries to grab around 220 images on a single charge.

The 1/1.8-inch CCD sensor captures enough information to create A3 sized prints, with the SMC PENTAX zoom lens (38mm-114mm equiv) offering seven elements in five groups, with three aspherical elements correcting spherical aberration.

No shake, non rattle and non roll.
A new Application Specific Integrated Circuit (whatever that is) claims to serve up more image-processing power, with the camera unusually offering three different types of Anti-Shake functions.

The first, SR (Shake Reduction), is a proper stabilisation system that employs two gyro sensors to detect the amount of shake and an image sensor (CCD) that moves both horizontally and vertically to reduce the wobbles.

Pentax’s “Blur Reduction” mode uses the time-honoured bodge of whipping the ISO rating skywards (up to 1600) when the light goes low, at the expense of a lower 5M (2592 x 1944 pixels) resolution,

The third function, Movie Anti-Shake, helps reduce wildly oscillating video clips via software wizardry, with the process resulting in movies with a narrower field of view than during normal recording.

Pentax have also included their new Face Recognition AF & AE function, which claims to automatically detect the position of someone’s boatrace in the photo frame, adjusting the focus and exposure accordingly.

Pentax Optio A20 Offers Three Types Of Anti-ShakeThe Optio A20’s auto-tracking AF feature should help doting mothers grab photos of their little darlings as they run into walls, with the focus frame automatically following the movement of the subject inside the photo frame.

The movie capabilities of the A20 are pretty good too, with the little fella capable of grabbing 640 x 480 pixels footage at 30 fps (frames per second), captured in DivX (MPEG-4 compliant) movie format (not supported on Macs).

As ever, there’s a veritable flotilla of auto/scene modes covering Landscape, Portrait, Night Scene, and Program modes, with Shutter-Priority AE and Manual Exposure offered for the adventurous.

The Optio A20 supports two types of removable storage media – SD and the new SDHC memory cards, with the camera offering 22MB of built-in memory.

The camera should be hurtling off shop shelves in the US from October 2006, priced at around 350 bucks, while UK pricing and release dates will be announced at a later date.

Pentax Optio A20 specifications
Sensor 1/2.5″ Type CCD, 10.0 million effective pixels
Image sizes 3648 x 2736, 3072 x 2304, 2592 x 1944, 2048 x 1536, 1600 x 1200, 1024 x 768, 640 x 480
Movie clips 640 x 480 @ 30fps, 320 x 240 @ 30fps
File formats JPEG Exif v2.2, DCF, DPOF, PRINT Image Matching III, AVI MPEG-4
Lens 38-114mm (35mm equiv), F2.8-5.4
Image stabilization SR (Shake Reduction), Movie anti-shake,
Conversion lenses No
Digital zoom up to 4x
Focus TTL contrast detection AF
AF area modes 5-point multi AF, Spot AF, Tracking AF switchable
AF assist lamp Yes
Focus distance Normal: 0.35m – infinity
Macro: 0.12m – 0.4m (at full wide-angle setting to 11.5mm)
Supermacro: 0.06m – 0.15m (at full wide-angle setting)
Metering TTL metering, Multi-segment, Center-weighted, Spot
ISO sensitivity Auto, ISO 64, ISO 100, ISO 200, ISO 400, ISO 800
Exposure compensation +/- 2EV in 1/3 steps
Shuttter speed 1/2000 sec to 4 sec
Aperture F2.8-5.4
Modes One shot, Self timer, Continuous, Remote Control,
Self timer 2 or 10 secs
Continuous shooting n/a
Flash Auto, Flash On / Off, Soft Flash, Red-eye reduction
Range: Wide: approx 0.06m – 7.1m / Tele: approx 0.35m – 3.5m
Viewfinder No
LCD monitor 2.5-inch TFT Low-reflective type, 232,000 pixels
Connectivity NTSC / PAL, USB 2.0 Hi-speed, AV out, DC in
Storage 22MB built-in memory, SD / SDHC card compatible
Power Rechargeable D-L18 Lithium-ion battery, Optional AC adapter
Weight (no batt) 125 g (4.4 oz)
Dimensions 88.5 x 54.5 x 23 mm (3.5 x 2.1 x 0.9 in)

Pentax

Zeiss Ikon SW SuperWide Camera

Zeiss Ikon SW SuperWide CameraWe know that we’re looking at a camera that’s only going to appeal to a tiny niche of photographers, but it’s such a beaut we had to bring it to your attention.

The Zeiss Ikon SW SuperWide camera is a delightful rangefinder style compact 35mm camera which is compatible with M mount lenses – meaning you can strap on superwide-angle lenses like the Distagon T* 2,8/15mm ZM and the Biogon T* types from the ZEISS ZM range.

Zeiss are world renowned for their ultra-high quality lenses (often seen in upmarket Sony cameras), but this release marks their welcome return as a high end camera manufacturer.

Zeiss Ikon SW SuperWide CameraTough as nails
Clad in an all-metal, traditional rangefinder casing, the Zeiss measures up at (5.4″ W x 2.9″ H x 1.3″ D), weighs 395g (13.9 oz) and looks like the kind of thing you could drag around a battlefield and deflect bullets with.

Directly above the lens is an accessory shoe for fitting the corresponding superwide viewfinder, with a second built in shoe for taking a flash (or a bubble level/other accessory.)

The camera takes good ol’ 35mm film ranging from ISO 25-3200 (manually set in 1/3 f-stop increments) with aperture priority or manual exposure modes.

Zeiss Ikon SW SuperWide CameraExposure levels are set via a combination of 3 LEDs which indicate shutter speeds ranging from 1/2000 sec. – 8 sec. in automatic mode (1/2000 – 1 sec. + B in manual mode.)

The camera is scheduled for an October release, priced at a not-entirely-unreasonable €799/£545(without VAT).

There are also rumours that Zeiss are considering a digital version, which has already caused great pools of expectant dribble to form around this writer’s mouth.

Zeiss Ikon SW SuperWide CameraZeiss Ikon SW SuperWide Camera Specifications
Camera type: 35mm camera with focal plane shutter and TTL light metering
Film format: 24 x 36mm on 35mm film
Lenses: Intended to be used with short focal length types of the Carl Zeiss T* ZM-mount lens family in combination with an external viewfinder. Other M-mount lenses, including M39 screw mount lenses with an M – mount adapter can be used
Exposure metering: TTL center-weighted metering at working aperture
Metering range at ISO 100 and f/2: EV0-EV19 (f/2-4 sec.,f/16-1/2000 sec.)
Film speed range: ISO 25-3200 manually set in 1/3 f-stop increments
Exposure modes: AE with aperture priority or manual; AE lock option for a single exposure or for a sequence of exposures; exposure compensation +/-2 f-stops in 1/3 stops set at shutter speed dial
LED display: Combination of 3 LED indicates shutter speed setting situation
Shutter and shutter speed: Vertical-travel metal focal-plane shutter with electronically controlled speeds accurate to 1/12 f-stop
Range in Automatic mode: 8 sec. to 1/2000 sec.
Range in Manual mode: 1 sec. to 1/2000 sec. in 1-stop increments; B.
Flash synch: Synchronization at 1/125 sec. and longer shutter speeds
Film transport: Rapid-wind manual advance lever, with ratcheted partial advance
Camera body: One-piece aluminum base structure, external magnesium covers, tripod thread 1/4 inch in base, two accessory shoes for external viewfinder and flash
Batteries: One CR 1/3 Lithium or two 1.5 V cells type LR44 or SR44
Dimensions: 138mm W x 72.5mm H x 32mm D (5.4″ W x 2.9″ H x 1.3″ D).
Weight: 395g (13.9 oz.)

Zeiss

Nikon D80 10 Megapixel dSLR Camera Announced

Nikon D80 10 Megapixel dSLR Camera AnnouncedNikon has announced their new ten megapixel D80 digital SLR, the company’s successor to the trailblazing D70/D70s cameras.

Along with the beefed up megapixel count, the D80 sports an updated body design with some softening of lines and a slight slimming down of the overall size.

There’s also a new image processing engine, improved menu interface, 3D Colour Matrix Metering II, 11-area AF system and configurable Auto ISO (selectable maximum ISO, minimum shutter speed) and configurable high ISO and long exposure noise reduction.

On the back of the camera, there’s a larger and brighter viewfinder and the welcome addition of a bigger 2.5″ LCD TFT LCD screen offering improved resolution (230k) and a 170 degree viewing angle.

Nikon D80 10 Megapixel dSLR Camera AnnouncedThe D80 also offers a suite of in-camera retouching tools including shadow / highlight enhancement, red-eye reduction, trimming and monochrome and filter effects.

Upgraders may not be so chuffed with Nikon’s decision to switch from the chunky Compact Flash format to SD cards, but new users will appreciate the adoption of the far more popular storage medium.

Sitting between the entry-level Nikon D50 and the semi-professional / professional D200, the D80 looks a wallet tempting proposition, and should provide fierce competition for Sony’s Alpha 100 SLR.

The D80 will be hitting the shelves in September with a keen body-only price of in £699 ($999), or £949 ($1299) for the kit including the 18-135 mm DX lens.

Nikon D80 10 Megapixel dSLR Camera AnnouncedNikon D80 specs Sensor 10.2 million effective pixels
Image sizes 3872 x 2592 (10.0 MP), 2896 x 1944, 1936 x 1296, 2240 x 1488, 1504 x 1000
Autofocus 11 area TTL, Nikon Multi-CAM1000
Lens servo Single-servo AF (AF-S), Continuous-servo AF (AF-C), Automatic AF-S/AF-C (AF-A), Manual focus (M)
Metering 420 pixel RGB sensor, 3D color matrix metering II
Metering range EV 0 to 20 (3D color matrix / CW), EV 2 to 20 (Spot)
Meter coupling CPU and AI CPU
Sensitivity ISO 100 – 1600, Up to ISO 3200 with boost
Auto ISO Selectable maximum ISO, Selectable minimum shutter speed
Shutter Electronically controlled vertical-travel focal plane shutter Shutter speed 30 to 1/4000 sec, Bulb
Flash sync 1/200 sec
Built-in flash Guide number 13 (ISO 100)
Wireless flash Nikon i-TTL, can act as commander
Continuous 3 fps, 23 / 6 frames (JPEG / RAW)
White balance Auto, 6 presets, Kelvin colour temperature, Manual preset (
Image presets Normal, Softer, Vivid, More Vivid, Portrait, B&W
High ISO NR Normal, Low, High, Off
Multiple exposures Yes
Viewfinder Eyepoint: 19.5 mm (at -1.0 m-1), Frame coverage 95% (approx.), Magnification approx. 0.94x, B-type Bright View Clear Matte II
LCD monitor 2.5″ TFT LCD, 230,000 pixel TFT, 170 degree viewing angle
Histogram Luminance & RGB histogram
USB USB 2.0 Hi-Speed (480 Mbps max.)
Storage SD / SD-HC card
Battery Lithium-Ion EN-EL3e (7.4 V, 1500 mAh)
Battery status Remaining charge (%), No. of shots taken since last charge, Battery life (5 stage) 3
Dimensions 132 x 103 x 77 mm (5.2 x 4.1 x 3.0 in)
Weight No battery: 585 g (1.3 lb)

Nikon

Casio and Kodak Announce New Digital Cameras

Casio and Kodak Announce New Digital CamerasCasio Exilim Card EX-S770
First out of the blocks is Casio who have announced their new Exilim Card EX-S770 camera, a cheekily ultra slim, seven megapixel style camera.

As shiny as a highly polished thing with an extra coat of gloss, the new Exilim sports a new smoothed, rounded design and – we have to say – looks a treat.

The camera comes with a 3x optical zoom lens (38 – 114mm equiv, f2.7 – f5.2) a big’n’bright 2.8″ LCD monitor and offers 16:9 format MPEG-4 video capture.

Casio and Kodak Announce New Digital CamerasIt’s a tiny little fella too, measuring just 95 x 60 x 17 mm (3.7 x 2.4 x 0.7 in) and weighing just 127 g (4.5 oz) without its Lithium-Ion battery.

Casio

Kodak EasyShare V705, C875, C743 and C433
Kodak has also been breaking open the New Camera Bubbly with the announcement of no less than four additions to their highly rated range of EasyShare cameras.

Casio and Kodak Announce New Digital CamerasThe 7.0 megapixel EasyShare V705 comes with the innovative Dual Lens design and a beefy 8 megapixel sensor, while the more conventional EasyShare C875 sports a 8.0 MP sensor and an all glass Schneider-Kreuznach optical zoom lens with 5x zooming.

The smarty-pants dual lens design of the V705 serves up an ultra wide 23mm fixed (35mm equiv) f2.8 view – great for architectural shots and wide open panoramic scenes – as well as a 3x zoom covering 39-117mm (35mm equiv) f3.9-4.4.

Casio and Kodak Announce New Digital CamerasKodak also announced two bargain basement cameras; the C743 and C433.

Try as we might, we couldn’t get excited about them, but we can tell you that the Kodak EasyShare C743 offers a 3X optical zoom and 7.1 MP, while the Kodak EasyShare C433 comes with the same zoom range and a lowly 4.0 MP sensor.

Kodak

Casio Exilim Zoom EX-Z700 Announced

Casio Exilim Zoom EX-Z700 AnnouncedLooking to scoop up some late summer sales action is Casio’s new Exilim Zoom EX-Z700 digital camera, available in silver and gunmetal.

This latest addition to the popular Exilim family serves up a beefy 7.2 megapixels-worth of resolution, with a large 153k LCD screen offering 1200cd/m2 brightness – claimed to be bright enough to let you see what’s going on in the dazzling sunshine of Grimethorpe and Abu Dhabi.

Despite its pocket-sized dimensions (88.5 x 57 x 20.5 mm ), the battery life looks pretty healthy, with a claimed 460 still images on a single charge.

New modes
The auto-everything camera boasts two interesting new ‘Best Shot’ modes; the first being Auto Framing.

This claims to keep “dynamic subjects like playful, active children at the centre of the photograph” apparently “solving one of photography’s most perplexing challenges” on the way. Phew. Thanks for that, Casio!

When the camera is set to Auto Framing, a thin, outlined frame appears on the LCD, centred on the moving subject of the photo, with the area within the frame being captured when the shutter is fully depressed.

Casio Exilim Zoom EX-Z700 AnnouncedCheese FX
The second, less useful, new mode is called Layout Shot, which lets users create collages made up of multiple shots of chums taken against the same scenic backdrop, or mix shots with different compositions to create a, err, “single artistic layout.”

Users keen to get a bit Salvador Dali on their Casio have to select one of two predefined layout templates, blast out 2-3 photos and then let the camera create its masterpiece.

To be honest, the thing sounds absolutely dreadful to us, but there may be some folks out there who can’t get enough of cheesy effects like this. But not us.

Rounding up the feature set of this thoroughly unremarkable camera is Casio’s Anti Shake DSP, a 38-114mm (35mm equiv) 3x optical zoom

The Casio Exilim EX-Z700 will be shunting off the shelves in the UK and Eire in August 2006, with priocing to be announced.

Casio Exilim Zoom EX-Z700 specifications

Sensor: 7.20 million effective pixels
Image sizes: 3072 x 2304, 3072 x 2048 (3:2), 2560 x 1920, 2048 x 1536, 1600 x 1200, 640 x 480
Movie clips: 640 x 480 @ 30fps, 512 x 384 @ 30fps, 320 x 240 @ 30fps
File formats: JPEG (Exif v2.2), DCF 1.0, DPOF, AVI Motion JPEG
Lens: 38-114mm (35mm equiv), 3x optical zoom
Image stabilization: Anti Shake DSP
Digital zoom: up to 4x
Focus Contrast Type AF (selectable between spot, multi)
AF assist lamp: Yes
Focus distance: Normal: 40cm-infinity, Macro: 15-50cm, Manual: 15cm-infinity, Metering Multi-pattern, Centre-weighted, Spot
ISO sensitivity: Auto, ISO 50, ISO 100, ISO 200, ISO 400
Exposure compensation -/+2EV in 1/3 EV steps
Shutter speed 1/2 to 1/2000 sec
Night Scene: 4 to 1/2000 sec
Aperture: F2.7 / 4.3 (auto switching)
Modes: Still, Still with audio (max 30secs), Continuous, BEST SHOT, Macro, Movie with audio, Voice recording
Scene modes: BEST SHOT
White balance: Auto, Fixed (6 modes), Manual switching
Self timer : 2 or 10 sec. Triple Self-timer
Continuous shooting: approx 1fps, High-speed continuous shutter and Rapid Flash approx 3fps
Flash: Auto, On, Off, Soft Flash, Red-eye reduction
Range: 0.15-3.4m (w) 0.4-1.8m (t)
Viewfinder No
LCD monitor 2.7-inch TFT colour, 153,600 pixels
Connectivity USB 2.0
Storage SDHC / MMC / SD card compatible, 8.3 MB internal memory
Power Lithium-ion NP-40 rechargeable battery, AC Adapter
Weight (no batt) 112 g
Dimensions 88.5 x 57 x 20.5 mm

Casio

Pentax Optio S7 Announced

Pentax Optio S7 AnnouncedPentax have announced their new ultra-compact Optio S7 camera which features a seven megapixel sensor with high sensitivity up to ISO 1600 (at 4 mp).Released almost a year after their popular Optio S6 model, the camera upgrade features Pentax’s “Face Recognition AF & AE”, a 2.5″ non-glare LCD monitor, DivX Movie Mode and support for the new SDHC card format.

Slippy slidey lens
The Optio S7 comes in a suitably fashionable thin and compact body with a 3X optical zoom which uses Pentax’s proprietary original Sliding Lens System to keep the camera pocketable.

The lens offers a par-for-the-course 37.5 – 112.5 mm (35 mm equiv) 3x optical zoom range, with an aperture of F2.7 to 5.2.

There’s also 4x digital zoom onboard, but we never recommend using built in digi-zooms (you’re better off blowing up the images on your home PC).

Blur be gone
The camera features a Blur Reduction High ISO mode to help reduce camera shake and blur.

Pentax Optio S7 AnnouncedThis ramps the ISO up to 1600, letting the Optio take advantage of faster shutter speeds in low light situations, but at the expense of image size, with the resolution slipping down to 4 MB (2304 x 1728 pixels).

Phizzog snapping
Employing the Face Tracker face-recognition technology from FotoNation, the new Face Recognition AF & AE mode claims to simplify portrait-taking by “automatically detecting the position of the subject’s face and adjusting the focus and exposure based on the detected position.”

The camera also sports an auto-tracking AF feature to provide continuously focus on marauding kids, mauling pets and passing UFOs.

Making movies
The Optio S7 can capture movies at 30 fps at sizes up to 640 x 480 pixels, with the DivX (MPEG-4 compliant) movie format offering longer recording times.

Pentax Optio S7 AnnouncedThere’s also a movie anti-shake feature, although this will give users a narrower field of view than during normal recording.

Auto modes
Naturally, the camera comes stuffed with a ton of auto picture/scene modes, covering subjects such as Flowers, Kids, Pet, Nifgt Scene and the all-important Food mode (has anyone ever used this, anywhere?!).

Storage
Accompanying the 23 MB of built-in memory, the Optio S7 unusually supports two removable storage media formats; the tried and trusted SD memory cards as well as the new SDHC memory cards.

The Optio S7 will be available in September for “under US$300.”

Pentax Optio S7 specifications
Sensor , 1/2.5″ Type CCD, 7.0 million effective pixels
Image sizes 3072 x 2304, 2592 x 1944, 2304 x 1728, 2048 x 1536, 1600 x 1200, 640 x 480
Movie clips 640 x 480 @ 30 fps, 320 x 240 @ 30 fps, AVI (DivX compatible MPEG-4), With sound, movie anti-shake
File formats Still: JPEG (3 compression levels), Movie: AVI (DivX, MPEG-4), Sound: WAV
Lens 37.5 – 112.5 mm (35 mm equiv) 3x optical zoom, F2.7 – 5.2
Digital zoom Up to 4x
Focus TTL contrast detection autofocus ystem with AF spotbeam
AF area modes 5-point multi AF, Tracking AF switchable, Spot AF
AF assist lamp Yes
Focus distance Normal: 0.4 m (1.31ft) – infinity, Macro: 0.15 m – 0.5 m (0.49 ft – 1.64 ft), Pan focus: 1.1m (3.6 ft) to infinity at wide-angle setting/ 4.5m (15 ft) to infinity at telephoto setting
Metering Multi-segment, Center-weighted, Spot
ISO sensitivity Auto, ISO 64-400, ISO 400, ISO 800/1600 (Blur reduction mode; 4 mp)
Exposure compensation o +/- 2EV, 1/3 EV steps
Shutter speed 1/2000 – 4 secs
White balance Auto, Daylight, Tungsten, Fluorescen, Manual
Drive modes One shot, Self-timer (10 / 2 sec), Continuous, Remote control (3 / 0 sec)
Flash Built-in
Modes: Auto, on, off, soft flash, red-eye reduction
Range: Approx. 0.15 m – 5.1 m (0.49 ft -17 ft) at 5.8 mm, Sensitivity
Auto Approx. 0.4 m -2.7 m (1.31 ft -8.9 ft) at 17.4 mm, Sensitivity Auto
Viewfinder No
LCD monitor 2.5″ TFT LCD, 232,000 pixels
Connectivity USB 2.0 (Hi-Speed), AV out, DC in
Storage SD / SDHC card, 23 MB internal memory
Power Rechargeable D-LI8 lithium-ion battery
Weight 100 g (3.5 oz) (no battery or card), 120 g (4.2 oz) (loaded and ready)
Dimensions 86 x 54 x 20 mm (3.4 x 2.1 x 0.7 in)

Pentax Optio s7

Lumix DMC-LX2: Panasonic Announces LX1 Successor

Panasonic Lumix DMC-LX2 AnnouncedThere was a lot to like when we reviewed the Panasonic Lumix LX1 digicam last year, but the fine optics and high-end feature set were badly compromised by snowstorms of image noise, even at relatively low ISO ratings.

Well, here’s the new LX2, which sticks with its predecessor’s f/2.8 28mm wide angle LEICA DC lens, 4x optical zoom (28mm to 112mm equiv) and MEGA O.I.S.(Optical Image Stabilizer) system and adds a beefier 10.2 megapixel sensor, using the same unique 16:9 widescreen format.

Mindful of the noise issues, the press announcement claims that the Lumix Venus Engine III will “dramatically” reduce the noise that “challenged” the LX1. Well, that’s one way of putting it, I suppose.

Bigscreen
New on the LX2 is a larger, 2.8″ 207k widescreen TFT LCD (with High Angle mode), with sensitivity going all the way up to ISO 1600 at full resolution, with a reduced resolution ISO 3200 mode for those super-dark moments.

Panasonic Lumix DMC-LX2 AnnouncedA new “Intelligent ISO Control” automatically boosts the ISO setting and shutter speed if the camera detects subject motion, and the camera offers an improved range of scene modes.

The LX1 ships with the same intuitive interface and superb joystick control, making it easy to set focus and exposure manually.

Tapping the joystick on the LX1 brought up shortcuts to white balance adjustment, ISO setting, image size setting and compression format, and the LX2 conveniently adds light metering and AF mode settings to the menu.

As before, there’s a switch on the lens barrel to quickly jump from MF, AF or Macro AF focus modes and to set the image aspect (4:3, 3:2 and 16:9).

Panasonic Lumix DMC-LX2 AnnouncedAimed at serious photographers, we hope to have a review copy of the LX2 shortly to put it through its paces.

Let’s see if it can topple our current fave high-end digicam, the Ricoh GR Digital.

Pricing and availability is still to be announced.

Specifications:

Sensor: 1/1.65 ” Type CCD, 10.2 million effective pixels
Image sizes
4:3 Aspect Ratio 3168 x 2376, 2880 x 2160, 2304 x 1728, 2048 x 1536, 1600 x 1200, 1280 x 960, 640 x 480
3:2 Aspect Ratio 3568 x 2376, 3248 x 2160, 2560 x 1712, 2048 x 1360
16:9 Aspect Ratio 4224 x 2376, 3840 x 2160, 3072 x 1728, 1920 x 1080
Movie clips
4:3 Aspect Ratio 640 x 480 @ 30fps / 10fps
16:9 Aspect Ratio 848 x 480 @ 30fps / 10fps, 1280 x720 pixels @ 15fps
File formats Still: JPEG (Exif 2.2), RAW
Movie: QuickTime Motion JPEG
Lens LEICA DC VARIO-ELMARIT 28-112mm (35mm equiv) in 16:9 aspect mode, F2.8 – F8.0 (w) F4.9 – F8.0 (t), 4x optical zoom
Image stabilization MEGA O.I.S. (Mode1 / Mode2)
Focus Autofocus, AF area modes 1-point, 1-point high speed, 3 point high speed, 9 point, Spot
Focus distance Normal: Wide 50cm/ Tele 100cm – infinity, Macro/ MF/ Auto: Wide 5cm/ Tele 30cm – infinity
Metering Intelligent Multiple, Center Weighted, Spot
ISO sensitivityAuto, ISO 100, ISO 200, ISO 400, ISO 800, ISO 1600, High Sensitivity Mode: 3200
Exposure compensation +/- 2EV, 1/3 EV steps
Exposure bracketing +/- 1/3 EV -1EV step, 3 frames
Shuttter speed 1/4 – 1/2000sec., Program AE : 1 – 1/2000sec.
Aperture Priority AE / Shutter Priority AE : 8 – 1/2000sec.
Manual : 60 – 1/2000sec., Aperture F2.8 – F8.0 (w) F4.9 – F8.0 (t)
Panasonic Lumix DMC-LX2 AnnouncedModes
Exposure Auto, Program AE, Aperture Priority AE, Shutter Priority AE, Manual
Scene modes
Portrait, Soft Skin, Scenery, Sports, Night Portrait, Night Scenery, Self-portrait, Food etc etc
Continuous shooting 2fps or 1fps, max 5 images (standard) max 3 images (fine)
Flash Auto, Auto/Red-eye Reduction, Slow Sync./Red-eye Reduction, Forced On/Off
Range: 0.6 – 4.9m (Wide/ISO Auto), 0.3 – 2.2m (Tele/ISO Auto), Flash output Adjustment (1/3EV step, -2 – +2 EV)
Viewfinder No
LCD monitor 2.8-inch wide Polycrystalline TFT, 207,000 pixels
Weight (no batt) 187 g (0.41 lb)
Dimensions 105.7 x 55.8 x 26.3 mm (4.16 x 2.20 x 1.04 in)

Lumix cameras